I was reflecting on the Amazon Kindle earlier. I kept thinking that it was ridiculous and overpriced but now that I found out what it actually does aside from being a glorified text viewer I just think it’s ridiculous. I would also say in general that something isnt overpriced if people are willing to buy enough of it for it to be constantly sold out. Isn’t that what they call market demand? Well whatever.
The main focus of my reflections was whether or not the likes of the Kindle was the future of books. I really want to say no because I have a lot of issues with things that are proprietary (is there some other term for this concept of things being proprietary? propriation? propriatariness? propriating?) but considering the fact that the iPod and video game consoles are still going strong I guess I’m the only one. Although it would be more ideal for there to be freer distribution and consumption methods the reality is that even if you have an inferior standard it is so much simpler to have one because there’s not a lot you can do with chaos.
So the future for digital books is the same as that for digital music: inferior devices dedicated to one given service or the other that are liable to go defunct due to the nature of the free market. My god I wish I had a back-lit calculator. Actually I don’t know how the hell these readers work, if you can plonk any given types of textual media in them and get them to work or not. But I can see greater obstacles to file conversion than what you face with audio/visual files where it’s more a matter of quality than it would be of actual usability/formatting. In that case some kind of media standardization would be more convenient than hardware and service standardization (which would be a monopoly) but there isn’t an incentive to present distributors for that even though there is for content producers and possibly consumers. Yeah I really shouldn’t write about things I know nothing about but it’s kind of fun to speculate and be way off base don’t you think?
Something I am curious about is the comparative environmental impact and resource usage of the likes of kindle compared with a book. One is inclined to think that it would be less waste but aside from clearly using less space and physical resources I’m tempted to think that the nature of the waste from production and the energy usage for the service and the device make things a lot closer. Comparative monetary cost for the consumer is also a curious matter considering that digitalization basically destroys the potential for contemporary secondary distribution (used books) which will ultimately drive up the average cost for media. One also wonders about the future role and value of libraries but that’s beyond the scope of today’s crappy post.
One last thing I need to say is that for the love of god they need to start either backlighting or using OLEDs (at that rate they need to make better OLED technology) or the likes on all screens for all handheld devices. If we all had screens that we could actually see without shining light all over them then maybe we wouldn’t need as much environmental lighting?
December 31, 2008 at 4:02 pm |
An avid reader and traveller (on the road the better part of the year), I have to say that the Kindle is probably the best consumer electronic device I have ever purchased. Yes, it is too expensive right now and, yes, it is rather ugly but it simply does what it does very well. Granted it may not be for everybody, but before classifying it as an “inferior device”, I would suggest you actually try it first. And, I would totally disagree on the need for a backlight – the great thing about it is that the screen is easy on the eyes and allows you to look at it for hours at a time. I have yet to see a backlit screen that is as comfortable to view as these “e-ink” style screens. With regards to the proprietary nature – yes, it is unfortunate that there is not some ubiquitous standard that would allow you to view any textual content on any device, but, that is reality and it personally just doesn’t really rile me very much compared to the utility I get out of using said proprietary device.
January 2, 2009 at 4:07 pm |
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